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Thread: Some Olympic observations.

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by RICHARD View Post
    Why not give out a medals for spinning the "wheel"?

    Medals for finding family and friends in the stands?

    Medals for getting your nation's flag first and making it around the arena while holding it up?

    I have to say I was watching track and field and saw a Jamaican athlete running with his flag all twisted around...I kepy yelling, "Straighten it out!!!"


    Did anyone watch the gal from Europe fall during the hurdles?
    I felt so bad for her and thought about the Mexican wrestling mask!
    The Swedish hurdler - she's pretty, so they had a long close-up of her before the race and talked about her ... I did feel bad for her, but loved that the Jamaican hurdler afterwards went to to her as she was leaving the stadium and told her to hold her chin up, these things happen, and not to feel too badly. THAT was good sportsmanship, IMHO.
    I've Been Frosted

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Karen View Post
    The Swedish hurdler - she's pretty, so they had a long close-up of her before the race and talked about her ... I did feel bad for her, but loved that the Jamaican hurdler afterwards went to to her as she was leaving the stadium and told her to hold her chin up, these things happen, and not to feel too badly. THAT was good sportsmanship, IMHO.
    She was a doll and I loved her hair.

    Did you know that the IOC give out a 'sportsmanship" medal?

    I saw where a Canuck sailor won it once for giving up his chance to win a medal when he saved two other competitors whose boats had capsized!

    Another "SMS" medal went to a guy who was running the marathon and was in first place when some nut ran out from the crowd and tackle him. He did get a bronze medal after the incident-He managed to get away from his attacker, but his legs seized up and he ended up getting passed in the last part of the run.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by RICHARD View Post
    She was a doll and I loved her hair.
    Hee hee - the braids on top of the head - such classic Swedish hair! When I was a child, both my parents were in the choir, so during church I was seated with a whole row of tall, white-haired, Swedish folks, two of the women always had their hair in braids circling the top of the head. I aspired to that for years until my hair was long enough to make it work!
    I've Been Frosted

  4. #4
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    Here are some suggestions from ESPN on incorporating some of the NHL players into the Summer Olympics.

    Drury's baseball pedigree would have boded well in Beijing
    By Terry Frei
    Special to ESPN.com

    NHL players aren't scheduled to get back into the Olympic act until the 2010 Games in Vancouver. After that, league participation in the Winter Games will be re-evaluated -- and perhaps will end.

    But during the 2008 Beijing Games, we've figured out that studio gymnastics commentator Bela "Bananas" Karolyi can become just as outraged as Don "Grapes" Cherry. We've also enjoyed pondering how hockey players also could have participated in the Summer Olympics:

    Synchronized diving: Henrik Sedin and Daniel Sedin, Vancouver Canucks, Sweden
    Diving would be prime gold-medal territory for Sweden if Swedish fans could get past the fact that the event, which debuted at the Sydney Games in 2000, is one of the most ridiculous-looking sports on the Olympic docket. That's saying a lot given the competition.

    Apparently, the synchronized divers are well-served if they look alike, because their goal is to be mirror images from takeoff to splashdown.

    Given the Sedin brothers' ability to dive -- they aren't the best in the league from Ornskoldsvik, but certainly are the best twins in the league from anywhere -- and the fact that Sweden didn't have a two-man team in the finals at Beijing, they would have been natural candidates to quickly pick up such maneuvers as the back 2½ somersault pike from the 3-meter springboard.

    This year's gold medalists, Feng Wang and Qin Kai of China, would have needed some home cooking to knock off the twins.

    Baseball: Chris Drury, New York Rangers, United States
    Next year will be the 20th anniversary of the Little League World Series victory of the Trumbull, Conn., team over players from Taiwan who in some cases looked old enough to be bartenders in Williamsport.

    Drury was the chubby No. 1 Trumbull catcher who switched to the mound when it was his turn. It was his turn for the title game, when his best friend Kenny Martin hit the game-winning home run. (Martin is Drury's best friend even today.)

    A broken wrist in Drury's junior year of high school nudged him away from baseball and toward hockey -- he was able to play hockey in a cast -- and the rest is history.

    But his obvious all-around athletic talent makes it apparent that he could have been an excellent baseball player if he had stuck to it … or maybe even returned to it. Now it's too late, though, because baseball (and softball) will be kicked out of the Olympics after Beijing. Next thing you know, some nut will talk about eliminating the Winter Games' showcase sport -- curling.

    100-meter butterfly: Marc-Andre Fleury, Pittsburgh Penguins, Canada
    Michael Phelps' gold-medal count would have been diminished to seven, and the one-hundredth of a second difference between Phelps and Serb Milorad Cavic would have decided the silver and bronze.

    200-meter freestyle: Dominik Hasek, Detroit Red Wings (emeritus), Czech Republic
    What a way to go out after retiring from the NHL!

    The guy who did it in freestyle fashion, doing whatever it took to make a save, including making like a Slinky (with credit to the MasterCard commercial), could have taken his no-rules approach to the pool and done whatever was necessary to race up and down the pool first.

    That is, if he didn't pull a groin muscle taking 45 minutes to put on one of those newfangled suits.

    Boxing: Georges Laraque, Montreal Canadiens, Canada
    Once he overcame his initial insistence on shedding and dropping his gloves before throwing a punch, he would have won his division in a walk. That is, if the judges didn't fall asleep at their Nintendo joysticks, or however that works now. He would have received five minutes for fighting and a gold medal.

    Floor exercise: Alex Ovechkin, Washington Capitals, Russia
    One of the NHL's strengths is its relative lack of look-at-me showmanship.

    Granted, that quality is considered a weakness by the men and women who have sports-marketing degrees and work in the front offices of the teams with dual NBA-NHL ownership -- the folks who want the game-night experience to be an end-to-end scream fest, designed by and for morons. And I'll grant that the NHL could loosen up a little, which is why I used the term "relative."

    Ovechkin, who gets plenty of opportunities, dances as much as anyone ever has in celebration of his goals, and until he gets ridiculous, at least he's offered a change of pace. It wouldn't have taken all that much for him to learn all those somersaults and twists.

    Mountain biking/cycling: Trevor Linden, Vancouver Canucks, Canada
    The possibilities for NHL players in this sport are numerous. That's not just because after games alone, some guys seem to ride from Vancouver to Sunrise, Fla., on the exercise bikes.

    But Linden takes the real thing seriously, and he began competing in bicycle racing while still playing in the NHL. He finished -- among other races -- the Transalp 2007 event in Europe, covering about 600 miles. And since his retirement in June, he might have cranked up his training.

    Beach volleyball: Pavel Datsyuk and Henrik Zetterberg, Detroit Red Wings, Russia and/or Sweden
    Given the adjustable nature of nationalities for Olympic competition, this could be worked out. They do everything else well together, so I assume they could kick sand in Misty (or Brad) May's face at this sport.

    Water polo: Dion Phaneuf, Calgary Flames, Canada
    After watching a bit of the Serbia-Croatia preliminary match, and remembering blood in the water at past matches (or whatever they're called), it's clear this game can be about as clean as Darius Kasparaitis. At best, the stars can push the envelope, especially underwater, because referee Konstantinov Fraser doesn't want to get his hair wet and look below the surface.

    Right up Phaneuf's alley.

    Equestrian: Joe Sakic, Colorado Avalanche, Canada, and Mats Sundin, Toronto Maple Leafs, Sweden
    The issue here would have been whether at the end of the competition, would they ride off into the sunset?



    Terry Frei is a regular contributor to ESPN.com. He is the author of just-released "'77" and of "Third Down and a War to Go."

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